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From urban parks and lakeside boardwalks, to the gardens and grounds of a city cemetery, these are ideal spots to see a range of species on their spring and fall migrations. Western tanager
Marcos Trinidad 1. AUDUBON CENTER AT DEBS PARK, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA This surprising birding mecca just five miles from downtown Los Angeles has 280 beautiful acres to explore, mountain
and city views, and, come spring and fall, migratory birds galore. "You can expect to see a ton of migrants here,” says Marcos Trinidad, director of the Audubon Center at Debs Park.
While hiking the park's main trail through landscapes of primarily native plants you might spot migratory species such as black-headed grosbeaks, hooded orioles and lazuli buntings
(known for their piercingly blue-hued heads). A good spot for sightings: the pine and silk oak trees around the park's Peanut Lake. “You can see them with your [naked] eyes, but to
really appreciate the beauty and colors, it's best to use binoculars,” says Trinidad. Throughout the year, keep an eye out for California birds along the trails, including California
thrashers, California scrub jays and California towhees. In winter, western tanagers can often be seen in the park's flowering eucalyptus trees. Ruby-crowned kinglet mirceax/Getty
Images 2. MOUNT AUBURN CEMETERY, CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS It may surprise some to learn that this cemetery is “the number one hot spot for spring migrants in the Greater Boston area,”
according to Ray Brown, host of the popular birding podcast _Talkin’ Birds__._ In spring, when the foliage is just starting to fill in, birders come from near and far to Mount Auburn's
paved pathways to view the “many species of warblers and other neotropical migrants that either stop there on their way farther north or stay there for nesting,” says Brown. You might spot
blue-headed vireos, ruby-crowned kinglets and yellow-rumped warblers, for instance. There's an information area at the cemetery's entrance where you can check the chalkboard for
recent sightings and add your own, too. Among the many species you can see year-round here (and often more easily during the winter months, after the leaves have fallen) are red-tailed
hawks, American goldfinches and the tufted titmouse. Red knot Arthur Morris/Getty Images 3. CAPE MAY, NEW JERSEY With the Atlantic Ocean to the east and Delaware Bay to the west, the Cape
May peninsula is a natural resting spot for birds in need of a break during their long spring migrations. These include the red knot, a shorebird with a terracotta-colored belly that winters
as far south as Tierra del Fuego, at the tip of South America. But what really creates the shorebird spectacle at this epic New Jersey birding locale each May is the annual horseshoe crab
spawning event, when these ancient arthropods carpet the beaches with their protein-rich eggs. Red knots, ruddy turnstones, sanderlings, sandpipers and other shorebirds gorge on the eggs to
fuel their continued migration to their northern breeding grounds.